🎬 Freaky 2 (2025)
👉 Vince Vaughn, Kathryn Newton, Celeste O’Connor
What if surviving high school wasn’t just about grades, cliques, and crushes — but also about surviving in someone else’s body? Freaky 2 brings back the outrageous horror-comedy formula that made the first film a cult hit, once again blending slasher scares with laugh-out-loud body-swap chaos.

The story picks up after Millie Kessler (Kathryn Newton) barely survived her bizarre and terrifying ordeal of swapping bodies with the infamous Blissfield Butcher (Vince Vaughn). Just as life seems to be returning to normal, a new supernatural twist throws everything into disarray. A cursed artifact, a botched ritual, or perhaps even the lingering evil of the Butcher himself sparks another horrifying swap — thrusting Millie and her friends into a fresh nightmare that’s bloodier, funnier, and even more unpredictable than before.

Once again, Newton delivers razor-sharp energy as Millie, torn between being a normal teenager and a final-girl fighter destined to face down killers. Vaughn returns with his scene-stealing mix of physical comedy and surprising emotional depth, channeling teenage awkwardness through the hulking body of a middle-aged man in ways both hilarious and oddly touching. Celeste O’Connor adds heart and humor as Millie’s fiercely loyal best friend, whose quick thinking and ride-or-die attitude help keep the chaos in check — even when the line between friend and foe blurs dangerously.

Director Christopher Landon, who reinvented slasher tropes with Happy Death Day and Freaky, pushes the genre mash-up even further in this sequel. Expect outrageous kill sequences that balance inventive gore with slapstick timing, side-splitting moments of mistaken identity, and a twisted emotional core about what it really means to grow up when the world — and your body — feels completely out of your control.

With bigger stakes, crazier kills, and double the body-swap madness, Freaky 2 promises to be a wickedly entertaining ride. It’s a film that knows horror and comedy aren’t opposites — they’re perfect partners in chaos. Bloody, clever, and unashamedly wild, this sequel proves that sometimes the scariest part of growing up isn’t high school itself… it’s waking up in the wrong body with a killer on the loose.
